Adolfo Aizen
Adolfo Aizen (Ekaterinoslav, June 10, 1907 – Rio de Janeiro, May 10, 1991) was a Russian Empire-born Brazilian journalist and editor. He grew up in Salvador, moving to Rio de Janeiro at the age of 15. In Rio, he worked at the publisher O Malho, responsible for the magazine O Tico-Tico, the first magazine to publish comics in Brazil. In 1945, Aizen founded Editora Brasil-América Limitada (EBAL), which would become the most important Brazilian comic book publishing house until the 1980s (the publisher was closed in 1995), being responsible for publishing comics like Superman, Batman and Prince Valiant, among others. In 2000, Aiezen was awarded posthumously with the title of "Master of the National Comics" by Prêmio Angelo Agostini.[1][2][3][4]
Adolfo Aizen | |
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Born | 10 June 1907 Dnipro |
Died | 10 May 1991 (aged 83) Rio de Janeiro |
Occupation | Journalist, publisher |
Awards |
References
- "Adolfo Aizen" (in Portuguese). Brasil Escola.
- "Quadrinhos – O nome dele era Adolfo Aizen" (in Portuguese). Tribuna do Paraná. March 30, 2003.
- Junior, Gonçalo (2004). A Guerra dos Gibis: a formação do mercado editorial brasileiro e a censura aos quadrinhos, 1933–1964 [The Comics War: the formation of the Brazilian publishing market and the censorship of comics, 1933–1964] (in Portuguese). Brazil: Companhia das Letras. ISBN 9788535905823.
- "A viagem que trouxe os quadrinhos de heróis ao Brasil" (in Portuguese). Universo HQ. March 14, 2014.